The mnml explosion wasn't particularly kind to hard techno. As the cleaner, reduced ethos of the music proved more popular the harder geared sound fell out of favour for a while, prompting certain labels to go into hibernation or dissolve completely. The pendulum has certainly swung back the other way of late and one of the stalwart labels of hard techno, Blueprint re-emerged this year after a good five years of dormancy. Paul Mac, a vanguard of techno for nearly fifteen years didn't suffer the same fate as some of the record labels, but for the past couple of years his releases have almost exclusively been limited to digital format. His latest excursion under the new moniker of Valmay on Blueprint strikes another win for the label this year and finds Paul Mac in top form.
“Distrust” is the sort of formula rich material Mac has been churning out in his sleep for years. It's not trying anything fancy with its blunted, sullen chords and Synewave-style percussion but within that it is a truly effective piece of dance floor techno. “Old Dog” goes further towards upping the momentum of the EP with a call and response style of bass and melody combination writ against brash, sloppy hi-hats and another rolling, New York techno style groove that will be familiar territory for fans of old Solid Groove and Proper records.
The title cut works its magic on a slightly different tip with much of the energy wrought through heavy, muted percussion, the melody arriving by degrees with open ended chord stabs placed at every second bar. Mac's arrangements go a long way to showing how his own productions and his mid 90's peers have helped shape the popular sounds of harder techno today and this EP highlights just how timeless and future forward they have always been.
On the other side of the coin there is still incredible minimal techno output, proving that even though the genre is falling out of favour with trend setting DJ's and DJ Mag reading clubbers, it still has has its place.
You’d never guess by listening to his raw, tripped out, minimal take on techno but Jens Zimmermann’s start in electronic music came via the ultra cheesy Euro-dance hit-makers Culture Beat. The keyboardist and programmer’s tastes obviously evolved somewhere along the line and he began concentrating his abilities on the more subtle rudiments of techno. Zimmermann’s latest for Snork Enterprises finds the producer at his most inspired with two abstract cuts that are — while modern in their detailing — suffused with a raw edge that harks back to analogue banks of gear and real time knob-foolery.
I am slightly loathe to use the term “tool” but “A”’s almost rudderless direction begets the nomenclature as it is the type of track that creates an atmosphere rather than any discernible melody that carries around in your head after it is finished. A steady filter of aquatic noise laps over tinder sticks of percussion while tendrils of effects bubble and fizzle away on the surface. There are few variants to the formula: a hard snapping hi-hat that emerges, murky pulses of the aqueous tones transpose into lower and higher octaves and a snatch of voice is whittled down to a sharp point. While this description may sound like some of the more boring elements of minimal techno regurgitated in long form (both sides clock in over the ten minute mark), Zimmermann’s detailing is on par with Baby Ford at his most spare and hypnotic. On the flip, “B” is a deep, shimmering mirage of lysergic techno equally designed for late night contemplation. Like “A,” its epic length and subtly changing elements give you the feeling Zimmermann is recording this live, the squeal of radio frequencies appearing in the mix adding to this greatly. Beneath the mammoth whirl of evolving pads and sparkling overtones lie minute filaments of detail. Delicate and faint, they add to the trippy nature of the track, heightening the feeling of it inhaling and exhaling, becoming animate. Simply sublime!
Valmay, Radiated Future
****
Paul Mac resurfaces on Blueprint for one of their finest moments during their comeback hour.
Jens Zimmermann, A/B
****
The former Culture Beat knob twiddler continues to cut deep, tripped out abstractions through a minimal vein of techno.
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